Can We Still Ride the Bike? | Tudunk még biciklizni?

In Hungary, and most parts of Europe the world is re-opening. The curve has been flattened and we all are learning to adjust to new rules of social distancing, until one or more vaccines are developed and widely available. As fast as music events have shut down, they are now back, even though very few things are on as they were originally planned as part of the summer season. Last weekend I have conducted two sessions of a more music recording. Now I am in Szombathely, in Western Hungary, with the Savaria Symphony. We are doing a free indoor concert (allowed to be held for 500 or less people) for the subscribers of the symphony. The program includes two all time symphonic favorites, Mozart’s G-Minor Symphony, No. 40, and the Third Symphony of Johannes Brahms. In two weeks I will be conducting the studio recording of a contemporary cantata by composers László Sáry with soloist, a small chorus and the musicians of the UMZE ensemble, all this at the wonderful Budapest Music Center. In the meantime a couple of new engagements are popping up for early fall as well.

They say that one cannot forget how to ride a bike. I have not conducted a live concert for months, and it kind of feels like when one rides the bike after a long hiatus. Your muscles do remember, but there is always a little bit of a doubt in the back of one’s head: can I still do this? Musicians of the Savaria Symphony and myself are having tremendous fun working on pieces like the Mozart and the Brahms symphonies, and we are thankful to be able to play in front of a live audience in a couple of days. Live concerts are truly a celebration of human existence, and it is amazing to be able to have such an amazing profession. Szombathely’s Bartok Hall’s registration list for the concert has filled up in a matter of a few days. Audiences are hungry for live music. I think we all remember what fun it is to ride a bike, and we are ready to do it again.

Azt mondják, biciklizni nem lehet elfelejteni. Azért persze amikor hónapokat kihagy az ember, akkor – még ha az izmok emlékeznek is – kis félelem mindig van, vagy legalább is a kisördög biztosan kérdezget halkan, miszerint “megy ez meg neked”? Biztos vagyok benne, hogy a Savaria Szimfonikusok muzsikusai is így vannak ezzel. Hétfőn kezdtünk el próbálni, és csütörtök este, a bérletes közönségnek szervezett ingyen ajándékkoncert keretében adjuk majd elő Mozart “Nagy” g-moll, és Brahms III. szimfóniáját. A “próbabiciklizés” már nagyon jól megy, örömmel és kimerítően dolgozunk a részleteken, és mindannyian várjuk nagyon az élő közönség előtt való muzsikálást.

A múlt hétvégén két napot filmzene felvétel dirigálásával töltöttem, július közepén pedig Sáry László kantátáját vesszük majd fel a Budapest Music Centerben énekes szólistákkal, kamarakórussal és az UMZE zenészeivel. Tulajdonképpen amilyen gyorsan abbamaradtak a zenélési lehetőségek, szerencsére majdnem ugyanolyan gyorsan vissza is térnek, még ha nem is olyan formában, ahogy megszoktuk. Már kora őszre is érkezett néhány új felkérés, közöttük olyan is, ami nem is volt tervbe véve az elmúlt szezonban. Olvastam, a Scala újra játszik, és máshol Európában is “nyit a zenebolt”. Ha vigyázunk egymásra, akkor nem kell zene és zenélés nélkül kibírnunk amíg a vakcina elkészül, és mindenki számára elérhető lesz.

Mozartiana, Little 9, Big 9/ Mozartiana, Kis 9, Nagy 9

Meetings, programming, and a fun Debutant Ball, – the major annual fundraising for the Symphony, organized by the Huntsville Orchestra Guild – were/ are included in my program in Huntsville, before I head back to Budapest. On November 13 I will be conducting the Danubia Orchestra at the Liszt Academy in a program of music by Tchaikovsky, Ustvolskaya and Mozart. Here are the details:
https://odz.hu

After the concert I am back on the plane again to catch my rehearsals and two performances with the Huntsville Symphony Orchestra. On November 17 I will be picking up my clarinet, playing the 2nd clarinet part of Mozart’s Serenade for Winds in c-minor, and listening to a beautiful flute quartet written by the same genius. This will be our, by now traditional, dinner-concert, and our first Casual Classic program of the season. We are back at the Speakeasy for CC1 at Straight to Ale brewery this year.
https://hso.org

On November 22 the HSO will join forces with guest vocalists and the Huntsville Community Chorus to perform Beethoven’s ever-popular 9th Symphony. For the first half of the concert I programmed the little brother of Big 9, composed about 120 years later, Shostakovich’s wartime-defying gem, his 9th Symphony.
https://hso.org
It is going to be a tour de force show both for orchestra and singers.

I often get the question: “But when do you actually compose?” I can tell you exactly: for example right now. (OK, I am taking a break so I can finish this post.) I compose between orchestra projects, meetings, fundraising events and radio interviews. I compose in my head, even when I do not have time to sit down with my laptop. I am excited about the music I am writing right now, and if you read the page called COMPOSITIONS here:
http://http://www.gregoryvajda.com/compositions/
with a little thinking you can figure out, what’s on my drawing board at this moment. However, I like to wait until the piece is finished, then I will post about it plenty. See you around, and come back to read again soon!

Találkozók, megbeszélések, program-tervezés, és a Huntsville Symphony működését támogató legnagyobb éves jótékonysági akció, a Huntsville Symphony Guild által szervezett Debutant Ball történt/ történik most Huntsville-ban. Kb. két hét múlva megint itt leszek, hogy eljátszam a, most már tradicionálisnak nevezhető Vacsora Koncertünk programján, Mozart c-moll fúvósszerenádjának második klarinét szólamát. Elhangzik még ugyanitt Mozart Fuvola-kvártettje is, ezúttal a Straight To Ale sörház egyik termében.
https://hso.org

November 22-én kettő, egy kicsi és egy nagy IX. szimfóniát vezénylek majd. A jelzők természetesen csupán a művek terjedelmére, és hangszerelésére vonatkoznak, hiszen zeneművek zsenialitását biztosan nem a méretük, vagy az apparátusuk határozza meg. Beethoven és Sosztakovics művei adják idei második klasszikus koncertünk programját.
https://hso.org
Nem először vezényelem ezt a darab-párosítást, és remélem, hogy most is tökéletesen kiegészítik majd a művek egymást, és az este folyamán mindkettőről kiderül, mennyire zseniálisak.

A két sűrű amerikai periódus között, november 13-án, a Zeneakadémián lépek fel, ezúttal az Óbudai Danubia Zenekar vendégeként. Az ÓDZ ismét izgalmas műsorra kért fel, benne Csajkovszkij, Usztvolszkaja (még sosem vezényeltem azelőtt!) és Mozart műveivel.
https://odz.hu
A jegyek szépen fogynak, úgyhogy akit érdekel, vegye meg a magáét minél hamarabb!

Be kell valljam, azért komponálok is, (szokták kérdezni, mikor… hát például most) megbeszélések, találkozók, próbák, emailezés előtt és után, sokszor fejben, ha nincs időm a számítőgép elé ülnöm. Blog-honlapom COMPOSITIONS oldalát böngészve nem nehéz kitalálni, most éppen mit komponálok, de a erről majd akkor mesélek, amikor már elkészültem a darabbal.
http://http://www.gregoryvajda.com/compositions/

Addig is, – a térben, és időben – legközelebbi koncerten találkozunk!

Hold Us Up Against Our Sins

‘Father in Heaven!
Hold not our sins up against us
But hold us up against our sins,
So that the thought of Thee should not remind us
Of what we have committed,
But of what Thou didst forgive;
Not how we went astray,
But how Thou didst save us!’

These are the final words of the cantata, “Prayers of Kierkegaard” by Samuel Barber. This piece was started by the composer in 1942, and was finished in 1945 (one of many pieces of art whose birth was delayed by World War II). To my knowledge it has never been performed in Hungary before. If you know otherwise, please send me an email via my website! I paired Barber’s work with one of Zoltán Kodály’s greatest compositions, “Psalmus Hungaricus” (Hungarian Psalm) for tenor solo, children’s choir, chorus and orchestra. There are some amazing musical similarities between these two cantatas. I am wondering if Barber knew or knew of Kodály’s composition, since Psalmus Hungaricus was premiered in 1923 and by the 40s Kodály was a famous and well respected composer all over the world. In any case, ‘Prayers of Kierkegaard’ does sound a bit like an homage to ‘Psalmus’, and Kierkegaard’s intimate and very personal prayers do bring the words of poet-preacher Mihály Kecskeméti Vég to mind. The latter words are from the 1600s. They are a typical example of the practice of interspersing a translation of a psalm (Psalm 55) and touching lamentations that express personal grief and sorrow.
Luther’s original hymn, “Ein feste Burg” (A Mighty Fortress is Our God) completes our Protestant musical journey in an original orchestral setting by Mendelssohn as part of his Symphony #5. The “Reformation Symphony” occupies the entire first half of the concert this Wednesday evening at the Liszt Academy of music with the Children’s Choir, Chorus and Symphony Orchestra of the Hungarian Radio Symphony. Ildikó Szakács and Gyula Rab will sing the solo parts in the second half.

http://www.zeneakademia.hu

Notes From The New Year

When so many things happen in a short period of time one can either write about everything, risking that his readers start skimming the post, or just write about something current and personal while ignoring everything else. I don’t feel like doing either in this New Year of 2016. I am going to just write things down as they come to my mind, limiting comments as much as I can.

The death of Boulez and the passing of David Bowie (yes, I do feel like it is all right to mention them in the same sentence) reminded me of the phenomenon how one person’s death can signal an already ongoing change. It is now officially post-Boulez and post-Bowie era. As so many people posted “when I met Boulez” pictures on FaceBook and elsewhere I didn’t want to do the same. Mostly because the few times we met we were not posing for pictures. I cherish my memories and yes, I do have my own “Boulez story” as well. I prefer to share them when we are sitting around a table sipping wine and having a conversation.

Tonight is the second to last performance of the annual revival of ‘Die Fledermaus’ at the Budapest Opera.
http://www.opera.hu
I am having a blast with this operetta (I’d rather call it an opera) and tons of fun working with many great Hungarian singers.

All day today I stayed home and studied “The Abduction from the Seraglio” by Mozart. As I mentioned it several times before, it is great fun to re-discover a piece of music or a complete opera for yourself by studying it again in depth. All I am going to say is: go and listen to the quartet from the end of Act 2 (#16)! It is amazing how Mozart can put interpersonal drama into music. In just one long(er) musical number one can experience trouble and resolution, and see two couples get back together.
By studying Mozart again I understand more of “Die Fledermaus”, too. Johann Strauss II learned a whole lot from Wolfgang Amadeus in how to write an ensemble and how to create drama on stage by words and music. Both operas are comic operas but they are definitely not “light”!
I am looking forward to the concert version of “Abduction” with the Huntsville Symphony in just 10 days.
http://www.hso.org

I finished editing the parts for my Clarinet Symphony. Tomorrow I am meeting with the two clarinet soloists for the first time. I am looking forward to the World Premiere on February 3 with the Radio Symphony.

Good news is in the making for Georgia Bottoms, A Comic Opera of the Modern South, and also there is a prospect for a new stage work of which I will be posting as soon as things become serious. I will be getting back to composing music for an animated movie, so my days are busy as ever.

Thanks for reading and stay tuned in 2016!
Happy New Year!

O farther, farther, farther sail!

Just 20 years after it was deemed “obscene literature” by Boston district attorney, Oliver Stevens on March 1, 1882, Leaves of Grass by Walt Whitman became the inspiration for Ralph Vaughan Williams’ Symphony No.1, A Sea Symphony.
Indeed, Leaves of Grass praises nature and the individual(!) human’s role in it and elevates the human form and mind to the level of topic of poetic praise. Suspicious at best! 🙂 I find it interesting how a young English composer picks a collection of poems by an American poet written in (mostly) free verse to put into music. Apparently Vaughan Williams carried a copy of Leaves of Grass with him at all times. I have to praise his openness and his imagination in selecting parts of Whitman’s work for the first, and longest of his 9 symphonies.
Tonight the Huntsville Community Chorus and the Huntsville Symphony Orchestra with the help of vocal soloists Tiffany Bostic-Brown and Terrance Brown will celebrate the human spirit and the power of live classical music with the Huntsville premiere performance of A Sea Symphony by Vaughan Williams.
http://hso.org
Other compositions on our 61st Season opening concerts are:
Four Sea Interludes and Passacaglia from Peter Grimes by Benjamin Britten. I hope you can join us on our MUSICAL JOURNEY of this season!

Sail forth—steer for the deep waters only,
Reckless O soul, exploring, I with thee, and thou with me,
For we are bound where mariner has not yet dared to go,
And we will risk the ship, ourselves and all.

O my brave soul!
O farther farther sail!
O daring joy, but safe! are they not all the seas of God?
O farther, farther, farther sail!

[The closing lines of Passage to India from Leaves of Grass]

Milano-Budapest-Huntsville

Welcome back everyone!
I hope you all had a great summer and you are ready for the next season of great classical music.
My 2015-16 season starts on September 4 with a concert performance of Lady Sarashina by Peter Eötvös at festival Triennial di Milano as part of the Milano World Fair.
http://triennale.org
I will be conducting the cast of the October 2014 Budapest production and the Hungarian Radio Symphony at Teatro dell’Arte.
See the blog post about the Budapest production here:
http://gregoryvajda.com

I have the honor of conducting the first two shows of a brand new concert series with the Hungarian Radio Symphony at the Budapest Music Center.
On the program:
Haydn: Symphony No. 6 “Le Matin”
Haydn: Piano Concerto in D-major
Beethoven: Symphony No. 6 “Pastorale”

The solo piano part of the Haydn concerto will be played by Misi Boros, an amazing young talent, winner of the Hungarian classical music TV talent show “Virtuozok”
http://bmc.hu
There will be two shows, one at 4pm, one at 7:30pm on Saturday, September 12. The Hungarian Radio will do its usual live broadcast that you can listen to online.

After Milano and Budapest I am ready for Huntsville. I will lead the Huntsville Symphony Orchestra in a blockbuster program of music by Britten and Vaughan Williams. This will be my first time conducting ‘A Sea Symphony’ by RVW. You don’t want to miss the amazing voices of Tiffany Bostic-Brown, Terrance Brown and the Huntsville Community Chorus! If you are in or around Huntsville on September 18 you don’t want to miss this performance!
Happy New Season!

Queen Of The Night and Private View

Tonight we concluded the 2015 Armel Opera Festival in Budapest, Hungary with two one act operas performed by the Josef Kajetán Tyl Theater (Plzeň,Czech Republic). The international jury Esther Lehoczky, Commissioning Editor of the Arts Department of Arte TV, Henry Little, Chief Executive of Orchestras Live, Dieter Kaegi, General Director of Theater and Orchestra of Biel-Solothurn-Bienne/Soleur, Kjell Englund, Managing and Artistic Director of Norrlandsoperan, Umea, Sweden and myself decided on Best Performance and Best Singer of this year’s festival.
French soprano Marlène Assayag won Best Singer Award for her performance in The Magic Flute directed by Robert Alfoldi.
Best Performance Awared went to: Van Parys: Private View performed by Muziektheater Transparant (Antwerpen, Belgium), directed by Tom Creed.
The Jury decided to give a Special Award to Pannon Philharmonic for their outstanding work in Donizetti’s The Siege of Calais and in Van Parys: Private View.

Everyone can cast a vote online for one production during the next four weeks.
Click here:
http://concert.arte.tv/fr/search/site/armel
The production that gets the most votes from the audience will be presented a prize once the voting ends. Please consider watching this years performances and voting for the one you think is the best!

Program, Play, Repeat, Keep It Interesting

The most difficult set of concerts I have ever done in my life was a 5 day-8 concert series with City Music Cleveland. Coming up with 8 different yet valid versions of Beethoven 8 in just 5 days was an extremely difficult task. The whole point of live music performance is to do things differently from one performance to the next. Whenever one gets to perform great war horses, like Carmina Burana, the pressure is on. You have to deliver your own version of a master piece without losing the true spirit of it. This is the real magic trick!
On Thursday the Rochester Oratorio Society, the Rochester Philharmonic, Leslie Ann Bradley, Anton Belov and Anthony Webb and myself performed a truly operatic, dramatic and at some points extremely funny Carmina Burana. I am looking forward to pulling another and different [!] rabbit out of my hat tonight.
http://rpo.org
I very much enjoyed sinking my teeth into Roberto Sierras eccentric ‘Fandangos’ and Ginastera’s ‘Four Dances from Estancia’ as well. Lots of percussion, lots of groove, lots of energy!

It is a real honor and a lot of fun to conduct the season finale classical set with the RPO! These two concerts also mark the end of my 2014-15 season. No more conducting until a couple of summer concerts in August.

Starting next week I will be teaching a 10 day master class at the Budapest Music Center.
http://bmc.hu

At the end of June I’ll be one of the judges of the International Armel Opera Competition and Festival. http://armelfestival.org

Soon I will be posting about the 2015-16 season, too.
Stay tuned!

Faust, An Eternal Will

“I, Faust, an Eternal Will” -sings Csaba Szegedi
http://csabaszegedi.com
in the role of Doctor Faust in the unfinished opera by Ferruccio Busoni.
http://wikipedia.org
Completed by Antony Beaumont, edited and cut to 90 minutes by director Mate Szabo
http://port.hu
and myself tomorrow’s performance will be the Hungarian premiere of this early 20th Century opera. As part of the “Faust 225 Festival” I will be leading the orchestra of the Hungarian State Opera and chorus and select principal singers in two performances only.
I am happy to have hundreds of opera lovers join me on Friday and Sunday, along with some of my Huntsville friends to enjoy this unique work at the beautiful downtown Budapest building of the State Opera
http://opera.hu
Both shows are virtually sold out.
Almost two years ago I posted about all the operas and ballets I had the pleasure to conduct during my professional career so far.
http://gregoryvajda.com
As of today I am happy to add the following operas to this list:
Ernst von Dohnanyi: The Tenor
Peter Eotvos: Lady Sarashina
Ferruccio Busoni: Doktor Faust

May, The Month Of Bells

Two concerts with Symphony Silicon Valley this weekend, one down one more to go. On the program:
Tchaikovsky: Romeo and Juliet Overture Fantasy
Debussy: Nocturnes
Rachmaninov: The Bells
http://symphonysiliconvalley.org
This is my second time conducting Rachmaninov’s “choral symphony”. Here is my blogpost from 2013 about my performance with the Hungarian Radio Symphony with an “all about bells” theme:
http://gregoryvajda.com
The sound of the famous “Russian Bells” of course can be found in Tchaikovsky’s Overture Fantasy as well, and also in the delicate sounds of Debussy’s mezmerising Nocturnes, with female voices added to the mix of the orchestra timbres.
More bells for me in the coming weeks. In between rehearsals and performances I spent most of my time in my hotel room while in San Jose, CA. Let me tell you, I was missing out on some beautiful weather. I spent several hours preparing my score and making additional cuts to Busoni’s opera, Doctor Faust. Two semi-staged performances are coming up at the Budapest Opera. The entire opera starts with the sound of Easter Bells and ends with the sound of more bells accompanying the strange and actually pretty blasphemous apotheosis of Dr. Faust.
http://opera.hu
I am happy to have some of my Huntsville friends in Budapest for the second performance. They will be on a cruise ship on the Danube and will be stopping by in Budapest just in time to see me conduct Doktor Faust. I am looking forward to showing them around in my hometown and to spend some fun times together in my neck of the woods.